I have started messing with Magic again, and I think if the playgroup in my weekend location can stick together I will keep with it. I certainly am reading sites and following coverage again, so it feels like it's 2003, except I think I am somewhat better at the game. Anyway, I know one person who used to love to read my 0-2 drop tournament reports and I'm hoping he still does. This was the first draft I had done in 4 years and the first I had done where I really had a semblance of what was happening in 6 years. Here we go with M11 Draft.
I show up to the store and I'm the last person for our crew of 9. Time may pass, but the same goobers still play the game. We've got the guy whose wife is calling him every five minutes wondering where his mom is so she can come pick up their damned kids. We've got the guy who has a totally savage, brutal, burngasm comment after every other person's sentence. We've got the guy talking about his awesome constructed decks before the draft. There's the older guy that doesn't fit in but tries to hoot 'n' holler with the youngans. Then we've got the guy who, God bless him, is just so annoying you can't suffice his existence in a world with any sort of higher power or omnipotent force of good. And then there are the people you can handle. All 3 of them. The draft starts and research just goes out the window. I can watch LSV draft all day on MTGO and think I've got a minor handle on things. What the hell was I thinking? First pick I take a Garruk's Packleader over Sleep. After this I don't remember much because I was seeing cards so late that should be mid-range to high picks that I had no idea what to draft. I think I passed a Serra Angel pick 2 for an Air Servant instead. This is instructional, right? Then I see a Blinding Mage pick 4. I stare at it wondering why it's there. Anyway, I take it just because I want to keep options open figuring white is there. Then I see a Forsee like pick 7 or 8 and scoop it up. I think I get an Azure Drake like 11th and at the end of Pack 1 I have a bunch of G/B/U stuff and a Blinding Mage. After this point I remember nothing specific. I got a Mitotic Slime to go with a Gravedigger along with a Cudgel Troll and Sylvan Ranger, which was good because at this point I was looking at three colors. Pack 3 is good news when I get a Cultivate early and then a second Awakener Druid and Acidic Slime. Just to tell you the level of this table (and I by no means am a good drafter, but still) there was an Assault Griffin that went 14th pick...come on guys, really?
I end up with G/U/B with this list:
2x Barony Vampire,
2x Awakener Druid
2x Lllanowar Elves
1x Azure Drake
1x Yavimaya Wurm
1x Gravedigger
1x Mitotic Slime
1x Royal Assassin
1x Acidic Slime
1x Sylvan Ranger
1x Giant Spider
1x Cudgel Troll
1x Air Servant
1x Gargoyle Sentinel
1x Garruk's Packleader
1x Howling Banshee
1x Jace's Ingenuity
1x Forsee
1x Cultivate
1x Mystifying Maze
8x Forest
5x Island
4x Swamp
The mana might not be correct, as in that may not be the numbers I played and it is probably horribly mis-built from the start. It only ended up being an issue in one game. Also, I only had one 2-drop and possibly too many 4 and 5-drops. Hey, I never said I was good.
Round 1: Guy who was super annoying.
We set down and dude comments that our first names are both Josh. Since I can't make it to the courthouse until Monday to change my name, we start Game 1. His deck is just awful. This will be a mini-theme. He was playing a bunch of terrible cards, the highlight being one of the 2-cost artifacts where you gain life if they cast a certain color spell. Anyway, I just crush him Game 1. Game 2, he at least shows something by getting rid of a guy with Doom Blade. He then has two bad creatures and then shows me the combo of the millennium, Mass Polymorph. Except he hits more terrible guys, one of which was a Liliana's Specter (COMBO, I guess). I crush him again. After the game he tells me he's running Mass Polymorph so he can hit Inferno Titan, which he cannot get into play any other way...yep. As an addendum to this match, here's a nugget of wisdom from this guy before we drafted. He said that there were two cards he would pick no matter his colors or anything if he opened or was passed them: Doom Blade (that's sorta reasonable) and Mana Leak (that's sorta not reasonable).
Round 2: Guy who was his own constructed hype-man.
I knew he had cracked a Grave Titan and a Fauna Shaman, so I was wondering how this would go. Turns out he went mono-black (apparently channeling Frank Karsten from Odyssey block) and his deck was muy mal. Still, he had Grave Titan. Game 1 he plays sub-optimal cards and it's over quick. Game 2 is a little different. I come out a little slow but he stalls out and really has nothing threatening and is stuck on five mana. He hits Swamp #6 and Grave Titan comes out. I start hanging back but he immediately attacks with it next turn. Here's another addendum. This guy sort of reminds me of me when I used to play. Loves the game and makes rough plays and then hates the game. Sure enough I have two guys that can double block and I take out GT. He sort of stares at the board and doesn't understand what's happening. I explain that both my guys will die and so will his. He finally figures it out and is not happy. Earlier he made a similar mistake with Stabbing Pain where he wasted the card and I tried to show him how if he had played the card differently, it would benefit him. I gave him the option to back up and he refused, which further reminds me of myself because I used to blatantly screw up, be told what I did wrong, and then just get pissed and never learn. Anyway, enough with the after school special. I come back soon and win.
Game 3: Ron Trauma
Ron was the best player there and a nice dude as the de facto runner of things. I thought his deck was a little janky but he showed me in the end. Game 1 the board gets cluttered but I have Packleader and eventually I overwhelm him. Game 2 I have mana issues and he takes me out quick. Game 3 is disappointing because I think if I get through Ron I could go undefeated but I keep a slow hand and he gets Fire Servant out on the table, which I know is bad because he has plenty of burn. Chandra's Outrage takes out my best guy and I take four, he then Flings a guy at me for 6 and then Fireball comes straight to the dome for like 100. Addendum #3: Ron's last name is not Trauma, but that is his wrestling name. Yes, he is a former local pro wrestler who packed it in but still works the show as a commentator and manager. So to me he is Ron Trauma. Why do I know this? I went to a show he was at. Yes, legions, whenever I drop my frequent cultural elitism, remember I have attended a local pro wrestling show and am full of shit.
Game 4: Luke, who I didn't mention earlier. He got hit by a car like a year ago, got a bunch of money and spent it all because he doesn't understand scarcity. He was there drafting because he had taken money from his girlfriend to pay bills and instead invested it in WOTC's product.
Luke had a U/W deck but his cards weren't that great. I think in every game he attacked into my empty board on turn three and cast Mighty Leap to get in that extra two to the face. Game 1 he just runs out of cards after casting what I swear was every physical copy of Unsummon in the world and it's over. Game two I stall on mana and he's able to clog up the board and then drops a Blinding Mage, allowing him to tap down the creature I needed to survive a turn later. We go to Game 3 and Ron lets us know since we have the fortune to play in a place that is not where we get the cards and closes at 10 pm, we have about fifteen minutes to finish up and the winner will split the prize in the finals. Game 3 gets pretty tight. He gets out some guys and I'm light on action. I'm down to 8 and he has more guys on board than I do. He untaps and drops Inspired Charge, the last card in hand, before I declare blockers...uhh? I was planning on chumping anyway, but now he gets nothing and even loses guys. On the next turn I'm able to drop Azure Drake and get Howling Banshee back with Gravedigger. I'm hesitant about playing the Banshee, which will take me down to 3, but I figure it's my path to victory as he has no flying blockers. A few turns later he concedes when he still has a turn to live. I get 9 packs. Addendum #4: Luke acted like he either hadn't slept in a week or was going through withdrawal from narcotics. Paying attention and moving seemed to be a chore. He also seems prone to thinking he's a man out of time, as about half his vocabulary comes from the movie Grease.
The perfect ending to this story? I got home and spilled Diet Mountain Dew all over my deck. Thankfully there was nothing good in there. This whole report was unnecessary, but fun. Hopefully I do it again next week.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Monday, May 24, 2010
Favorite Music of 2009
Almost six months late, here are my favorite slabs of new music from last year. Noticed there is no "best-of" or "top" monikers, because someone with the limited access and musical vocabulary as myself needs to limit hyperbole.
In no particular order:
Revocation - "Existence is Futile"
Everyone characterizes this as thrash metal, but it always seemed more like a mix between old-school death metal and melodic death metal. There's no keyboards or clean singing, but it doesn't have the brutality of Morbid Angel or Death. I probably just can't categorize music. No matter the genre, this album knocked me on my ass. The songwriting is tight and the whole band contributes cleanly in the mix. Quasi-jazz breakdowns get thrown in and the songs have grooves but never get boring. I've heard that this album isn't a huge step up from their first and that the second half is much stronger than the first but I disagree. The songs seem more focused here than on "Empire of the Obscene" and overall I think the first half is stronger, but the whole thing is excellent.
Favorite track - "Deathonomics"
Cormorant - "Metazoa"
I started checking out more unsigned/obscure bands this past year and Cormorant (along with Iron Thrones, whose album came out in 2008 or else it would be on here) was one of the best finds. They have a really nice progressive black metal sound going on, but with some serious hooks and melodies. The average song length is around seven minutes but all the tracks fly by they're so good. This album was the first I bought a physical copy of in probably five years. I've completely shifted to digital music, but had to have this record so bad I bought the CD because I couldn't find it for download. You should too.
Favorite track - "Blood on the Cornfields"
Baroness - "Blue Record"
Did I come up with the term Post-Appalachian Sludge to describe Baroness? I can't remember and it is probably a misnomer, but I like it damn it. I find this weaker than their previous titan of a release, The Red Album, but this is still a great collection of stoner rock that crushes you with riff after riff as John Baizely curdles you ears with his Georgian shouts and screams. I'm not sure how I feel about the repeated melody that runs throughout, though it is quite beautiful.
Favorite track - "Swollen and Halo"
Centaurus-A - "Side Effects Expected"
This is my "doesn't change or innovate but still still rocks" pick. These guys dropped an acceptable modern death metal release. The standout here is the lead work, which flows to soaring heights that only Revocation equaled. Seriously, the solos are downright awesome. The real bummer is the production, with the guitars sounding artificial and stagnant and the drums being the definition of over-produced. Hopefully they can get a better mix and work on diversifying their songs, because they've got real potential.
Favorite track - "The Praying Mantis"
Saviours - "Accelerated Living"
By and large, I've avoided the "re-thrash" movement because it all blends together for me. The one exception was Saviours, a band I'm glad I took a chance on. In addition to being a straight-ahead steamroller of an album, the high point is the production, which is some of the best I've heard on a modern metal album. It sounds so raw, but not in an 80s sort of way. No, this is something I thought I'd never hear: purely synthetic nostalgia that slays.
Favorite track - "Slave to the Hex"
Mastodon - "Crack the Skye"
Revelation: I've never been a big Mastodon fan. So yes, if you're on of their fans that thinks they betrayed their real sound and sold out to the masses, I'm your nemesis. What I always heard was a bunch of half-realized riffs and a band running on pure energy. Sure, they had songs I could get into, but with Crack the Skye they ditched all that and made a complete record, dare I say a prog-metal masterpiece. When Brett Hinds (I hope) sang "Spiraling up through the crack in the skye" it was like I literally had come online, fully awake and ready to view Rasputin through a wormhole.
Favorite track - "The Czar"
Kylesa - "Static Tensions"
Two drummers in a sludge band? Seemed a bit unnecessary, but I'll check it out. Turns out the rhythms turn into a lulling feeling that somehow never gets undone by the harsh-ish vocals. Outside of that, I don't have much to say. Just listen to this is you like metal, because it's that damn good.
Favorite track - "To Walk Alone"
Between the Buried and Me - "The Great Misdirect"
Are they still a band where the moments tend to overwhelm the whole? You bet, but when the moments are this good, just shut up and listen. I still think they've yet to write their best material, which is kind of scary. One definite upgrade from "Colors?" The vocals, which seem much stronger and varied than before, where they just plodded into the background of everything else. Besides Cynic, there's not a band whose next album I can't wait to hear more.
Favorite track - I'm going to cheat and say that "Swim to the Moon" and "Disease, Injury, Madness" tie.
Devin Townsend Project - "Ki" and "Addicted"
I've never gotten into Strapping Young Lad or listened to much of his previous solo efforts, but I think it would be hard to find a guy more respected by such a wide variety of people. The guy personifies credibility. Since I follow metal on the internet, it would've been impossible to not check these releases out. The first two parts of a planned quartet of albums, "Ki" is the mellow, restrained lead-in to the heavier, catchy, and at times ridiculously poppy sound of "Addicted." They're both great and a testament to how talented Townsend and his associates are, as well as how easily he can switch sounds.
Favorite track - "Trainfire" from "Ki" and "Hyperdrive!" from "Addicted"
Porcupine Tree - "The Incident"
The fact that I had to think for a few seconds what the title of this was is probably the best sign that of the the past tens years or so, this is my least favorite release of Steven Wilson's biggest project. Originally I was excited as can be that the album would be one single huge track, no breaks or explained movements. I still haven't figured out if I just misrepresented what was reported, but the album instead is split up into fourteen tracks. Too many of them are short interludes that are unfortunately forgettable and feel like a void on the work as a whole. There really are only two tracks that stand out to me, with Wilson showing again that he can write a haunting ending like no one else. They're still one of my favorite bands ever, but this was a a disappointment. Still, I'll listen to whatever they release.
Favorite track - "I Drive the Hearse"
There it is. I probably missed all the good albums.
In no particular order:
Revocation - "Existence is Futile"
Everyone characterizes this as thrash metal, but it always seemed more like a mix between old-school death metal and melodic death metal. There's no keyboards or clean singing, but it doesn't have the brutality of Morbid Angel or Death. I probably just can't categorize music. No matter the genre, this album knocked me on my ass. The songwriting is tight and the whole band contributes cleanly in the mix. Quasi-jazz breakdowns get thrown in and the songs have grooves but never get boring. I've heard that this album isn't a huge step up from their first and that the second half is much stronger than the first but I disagree. The songs seem more focused here than on "Empire of the Obscene" and overall I think the first half is stronger, but the whole thing is excellent.
Favorite track - "Deathonomics"
Cormorant - "Metazoa"
I started checking out more unsigned/obscure bands this past year and Cormorant (along with Iron Thrones, whose album came out in 2008 or else it would be on here) was one of the best finds. They have a really nice progressive black metal sound going on, but with some serious hooks and melodies. The average song length is around seven minutes but all the tracks fly by they're so good. This album was the first I bought a physical copy of in probably five years. I've completely shifted to digital music, but had to have this record so bad I bought the CD because I couldn't find it for download. You should too.
Favorite track - "Blood on the Cornfields"
Baroness - "Blue Record"
Did I come up with the term Post-Appalachian Sludge to describe Baroness? I can't remember and it is probably a misnomer, but I like it damn it. I find this weaker than their previous titan of a release, The Red Album, but this is still a great collection of stoner rock that crushes you with riff after riff as John Baizely curdles you ears with his Georgian shouts and screams. I'm not sure how I feel about the repeated melody that runs throughout, though it is quite beautiful.
Favorite track - "Swollen and Halo"
Centaurus-A - "Side Effects Expected"
This is my "doesn't change or innovate but still still rocks" pick. These guys dropped an acceptable modern death metal release. The standout here is the lead work, which flows to soaring heights that only Revocation equaled. Seriously, the solos are downright awesome. The real bummer is the production, with the guitars sounding artificial and stagnant and the drums being the definition of over-produced. Hopefully they can get a better mix and work on diversifying their songs, because they've got real potential.
Favorite track - "The Praying Mantis"
Saviours - "Accelerated Living"
By and large, I've avoided the "re-thrash" movement because it all blends together for me. The one exception was Saviours, a band I'm glad I took a chance on. In addition to being a straight-ahead steamroller of an album, the high point is the production, which is some of the best I've heard on a modern metal album. It sounds so raw, but not in an 80s sort of way. No, this is something I thought I'd never hear: purely synthetic nostalgia that slays.
Favorite track - "Slave to the Hex"
Mastodon - "Crack the Skye"
Revelation: I've never been a big Mastodon fan. So yes, if you're on of their fans that thinks they betrayed their real sound and sold out to the masses, I'm your nemesis. What I always heard was a bunch of half-realized riffs and a band running on pure energy. Sure, they had songs I could get into, but with Crack the Skye they ditched all that and made a complete record, dare I say a prog-metal masterpiece. When Brett Hinds (I hope) sang "Spiraling up through the crack in the skye" it was like I literally had come online, fully awake and ready to view Rasputin through a wormhole.
Favorite track - "The Czar"
Kylesa - "Static Tensions"
Two drummers in a sludge band? Seemed a bit unnecessary, but I'll check it out. Turns out the rhythms turn into a lulling feeling that somehow never gets undone by the harsh-ish vocals. Outside of that, I don't have much to say. Just listen to this is you like metal, because it's that damn good.
Favorite track - "To Walk Alone"
Between the Buried and Me - "The Great Misdirect"
Are they still a band where the moments tend to overwhelm the whole? You bet, but when the moments are this good, just shut up and listen. I still think they've yet to write their best material, which is kind of scary. One definite upgrade from "Colors?" The vocals, which seem much stronger and varied than before, where they just plodded into the background of everything else. Besides Cynic, there's not a band whose next album I can't wait to hear more.
Favorite track - I'm going to cheat and say that "Swim to the Moon" and "Disease, Injury, Madness" tie.
Devin Townsend Project - "Ki" and "Addicted"
I've never gotten into Strapping Young Lad or listened to much of his previous solo efforts, but I think it would be hard to find a guy more respected by such a wide variety of people. The guy personifies credibility. Since I follow metal on the internet, it would've been impossible to not check these releases out. The first two parts of a planned quartet of albums, "Ki" is the mellow, restrained lead-in to the heavier, catchy, and at times ridiculously poppy sound of "Addicted." They're both great and a testament to how talented Townsend and his associates are, as well as how easily he can switch sounds.
Favorite track - "Trainfire" from "Ki" and "Hyperdrive!" from "Addicted"
Porcupine Tree - "The Incident"
The fact that I had to think for a few seconds what the title of this was is probably the best sign that of the the past tens years or so, this is my least favorite release of Steven Wilson's biggest project. Originally I was excited as can be that the album would be one single huge track, no breaks or explained movements. I still haven't figured out if I just misrepresented what was reported, but the album instead is split up into fourteen tracks. Too many of them are short interludes that are unfortunately forgettable and feel like a void on the work as a whole. There really are only two tracks that stand out to me, with Wilson showing again that he can write a haunting ending like no one else. They're still one of my favorite bands ever, but this was a a disappointment. Still, I'll listen to whatever they release.
Favorite track - "I Drive the Hearse"
There it is. I probably missed all the good albums.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
C2E2 Report
I don't think I've ever written a con report, or at least published one. In honor of the first new con in Chicago in several years, I'm going to do this shit. One glaring flaw is that I took a record-low amount of photos, less than ten, so you'll just have to believe what I'm saying. I would imagine anyone that is reading this was probably there with me, so that disclaimer is pointless.
A little background: I attended Wizard's Chicago show from 2005-2009. Some years were better than others. Even at its most diverse, it's focus was always on Marvel and DC. As I gradually moved away from being exclusively in that territory, the show offered me less and less, but there were always things to look forward to and it always functioned as a vacation and a chance to hang out with friends, some who I rarely saw outside the trip. Unfortunately, the bottom fell out of Wizard's downward slope last year. Their strategy switched from comics to random media guests. Now I know all about how outside groups have been brought into comic conventions, often turning them into more of a general pop culture gathering than one for comics only. But in Wizard's case, they abandoned the comics part greatly. Marvel and DC weren't even there, which for a show that catered significantly to them and their fans, was downright baffling. Add to this Wizard's inability to bring in fresh guests and you had an event that I didn't feel like was worth driving six hours for and paying $60 to experience. As a group, we collectively decided we were done with Wizardworld.
At the time, Reed Exhibitions had announced they were going to bring a con to Chicago in 2010 but not much was known about it. However, judging from the quick rise of the New York Comic-Con that they ran, I had high hopes. As more details became available, my friends and I decided that C2E2 made more sense. I had a few problems with the scheduling due to school but was able to overcome them and I'm glad I did. I think it was a good first showing that has potential to only get better in the coming years.
Some specific points.
- There was a good variety and number of publishers there. Marvel, DC, Image, Dark Horse, Boom!, Oni, Top Shelf, and Avatar all had booths. While I would love to see Fantagraphics or PictureBox, those companies are never going to come to a show like this. Pantheon was supposed to have a presence of some sort, but that didn't happen for reasons I'll get into later. There was a section on the floor dedicated to webcomics that saw heavy traffic also.
- Significant creator presence. In particular, they were creators there that had been at Wizard shows once or twice in the past and would have been established as a draw. The difference here was, they were all at this show. For a core Marvel/DC superhero fan, this show had a massive list of big names. In addition to that, Mike Mignola and Jeff Smith filled enough of a quasi-indie niche to show that the organizers aren't only thinking about one group. Also, Chris Ware (!) and Dash Shaw being present is a big deal period. Ware was only there for one hour and Shaw was in limbo the whole weekend (I'm getting there) but still: Chris Ware and Dash Shaw! Hopefully more people in the vein of the last group are continually recruited.
- The show is focused on comics. Sure, there were non-comics entities there. Art schools, Nintendo, and even a tattoo conglomerate had set up shop. But by and large, comics ruled the day. There were hardly any D-list celebrities there and outside the Kick-Ass premiere and a Doctor Who screening, there was really very little movie or television presence. Will this change in the coming years? Probably, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't appreciate it now.
- Much smaller than I expected. I'd guess this is more a product of first-year jitters than anything else. The show floor was smaller than the one in Rosemont for Wizard's show and there was still a good amount of open space. Even though there were more publishers, there were a lot less retailers than at past cons. Artist's Alley seemed about comparable. Attendance wasn't high either. Saturday was the busiest day as usual, but even then walking around wasn't too cumbersome. The thing is, I like all that just fine. The show had a pretty relaxed atmosphere, that while probably nothing like MoCCA or Heroes Con, still was pretty refreshing.
Beyond this, there is a multitude of small things I want to nitpick about. First, McCormick Place, where the show was, is in BFE. When I heard the location was going to be actually in Chicago instead of in Rosemont, I figured this meant downtown. Not exactly. McCormick Place basically was dropped on a huge piece of land right off the interstate. There is nothing around it. On Friday, we drove around for over an hour trying to find something to eat. Turns out there aren't any restaurants in the surrounding area, or at least we couldn't find any, with a GPS. On Sunday, we just decided to eat in Rosemont, where we staying, before heading to the con to avoid previous headaches. Secondly, the show was organized somewhat poorly. Part of this is that it was the first year, and both the attendees and the staff have to get used to everything, but beyond that some odd choices were made. We were often directed into rooms we could have easily avoided, and lines into the show were micromanaged to the point of futility. McCormick Place itself is confusing. Hopefully most of this will be better for both sides in the coming years as everyone settles in. Lastly, some of the staff were overly adamant and aggressive, but that has been the case for six years straight. Still, it's not necessary to yell at people to move forward when the person in front of them has taken five steps. Just sayin'.
Here's most of my haul.
It was another light year for me, as school and a pending trip to Germany in the summer are getting most of my money. Still, I'm happy with what I got. I found Boy's Club #2 and 3 along with Ganges #3 at the Chicago Comics booth. Always happy to support them after I visited their excellent store last year. I talked with Guy Davis for a bit in Artist's Alley and bought his sketchbook. I'm usually not a fan of con sketchbooks, as them seem hastily put together and I rarely give them a second look, but Davis's is nice. It's bound, bigger, and has a wide variety of art, along with quite a bit of interior writing and commentary, something missing from almost every other sketchbook I've looked at. Also ran into Matt Kindt for the third year in a row at the Top Shelf booth, where I got his new Super-Spy collection. I loved Super-Spy and bought this on the spot. Kindt unknowingly gave even more firepower to my obsession with eye patches by sketching one of the characters with one on the inside cover. I also bought almost all the Hellboy and BPRD trades I was missing, but didn't feel like including them, and I really don't know why. They're awesome though, trust me.
Prints and sketches have taken a hit in the past few years, as even the smaller artists I care about have been getting more popular and started charging more for their talents. Good for them I say. Guy Davis did the quick Lobster Johnson for me when I bought his sketchbook. The Seaguy was done by Cameron Stewart, who I didn't even know was going to be at the show until he was invited up on stage during a panel previewing a documentary on Grant Morrison. While I was at his table, a guy came up and asked if he could pencil a drawing of Batman on his leg that would be used as an outline for a tattoo. Stewart was reluctant, especially to draw it straight onto the guy. However, thanks to the internet I found the ending to this story. He drew it out on paper and gave it to the guy, who then did get the tattoo, which you can see here (went for the arm instead).
Special mention has got to go to these bad boys, courtesy of Cliff Chiang. I had seen these on his website and forgotten about them, but at $20 for both, how could I not buy them?
The thing that I'm most disappointed to not have in any of the pictures is a copy of Dash Shaw's new book Bodyworld. Originally serialized and still available as a webcomic on his website, it's this crazy soap-opera/sci-fi story that was unlike anything I'd ever read. The pictures of the book I've seen are gorgeous and it was the thing I was most looking forward to buying, not to mention actually meeting Shaw, whose other book, The Unclothed Man in the 35th Century AD, had some excellent stories from his MOME and animation work as well. Sadly, Shaw didn't really have a presence at the show. He was on a panel with Chip Kidd and Chris Ware that I attended, but after that I searched for the Pantheon booth and couldn't find it. I was dismayed that they weren't in the show program even though they had been listed on the website. Randomly enough on Saturday, while setting on the floor in the cafeteria, I saw Shaw walking through the room. Funnily, my foot was asleep, so I couldn't catch up to him before he went outside. I didn't feel like walking outside and interrupting his phone conversation, so I stalker-esque waited for him. I ended up letting him back inside as the doors in that area lock from the inside (I didn't get it either) and talking to him from there. I hope he didn't think I was some nutball, but he was the person I was most looking forward to seeing. He went on to inform me that there had been a mixup and Pantheon had no exhibitor space or any of their product at the show, so he was basically screwed. We ended up setting in the cafeteria and talking about all kinds of random comics stuff for about a half hour. He signed my copy of Unclothed Man and drew some nice pen sketches on the inside. While I felt bad he didn't have any presence at the show, I likely wouldn't have gotten to talk to him on such an intimate level if he had. It's easily the coolest thing that's ever happened to me at a con, getting to talk to a guy who really is one of the most interesting and visionary new cartoonists in comics.
Overall, C2E2 was a grand ol' time. The show was leagues better than any of the Wizard shows and has the potential to get even better in the years to come. With some luck I'll be there to experience some of them.
A little background: I attended Wizard's Chicago show from 2005-2009. Some years were better than others. Even at its most diverse, it's focus was always on Marvel and DC. As I gradually moved away from being exclusively in that territory, the show offered me less and less, but there were always things to look forward to and it always functioned as a vacation and a chance to hang out with friends, some who I rarely saw outside the trip. Unfortunately, the bottom fell out of Wizard's downward slope last year. Their strategy switched from comics to random media guests. Now I know all about how outside groups have been brought into comic conventions, often turning them into more of a general pop culture gathering than one for comics only. But in Wizard's case, they abandoned the comics part greatly. Marvel and DC weren't even there, which for a show that catered significantly to them and their fans, was downright baffling. Add to this Wizard's inability to bring in fresh guests and you had an event that I didn't feel like was worth driving six hours for and paying $60 to experience. As a group, we collectively decided we were done with Wizardworld.
At the time, Reed Exhibitions had announced they were going to bring a con to Chicago in 2010 but not much was known about it. However, judging from the quick rise of the New York Comic-Con that they ran, I had high hopes. As more details became available, my friends and I decided that C2E2 made more sense. I had a few problems with the scheduling due to school but was able to overcome them and I'm glad I did. I think it was a good first showing that has potential to only get better in the coming years.
Some specific points.
- There was a good variety and number of publishers there. Marvel, DC, Image, Dark Horse, Boom!, Oni, Top Shelf, and Avatar all had booths. While I would love to see Fantagraphics or PictureBox, those companies are never going to come to a show like this. Pantheon was supposed to have a presence of some sort, but that didn't happen for reasons I'll get into later. There was a section on the floor dedicated to webcomics that saw heavy traffic also.
- Significant creator presence. In particular, they were creators there that had been at Wizard shows once or twice in the past and would have been established as a draw. The difference here was, they were all at this show. For a core Marvel/DC superhero fan, this show had a massive list of big names. In addition to that, Mike Mignola and Jeff Smith filled enough of a quasi-indie niche to show that the organizers aren't only thinking about one group. Also, Chris Ware (!) and Dash Shaw being present is a big deal period. Ware was only there for one hour and Shaw was in limbo the whole weekend (I'm getting there) but still: Chris Ware and Dash Shaw! Hopefully more people in the vein of the last group are continually recruited.
- The show is focused on comics. Sure, there were non-comics entities there. Art schools, Nintendo, and even a tattoo conglomerate had set up shop. But by and large, comics ruled the day. There were hardly any D-list celebrities there and outside the Kick-Ass premiere and a Doctor Who screening, there was really very little movie or television presence. Will this change in the coming years? Probably, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't appreciate it now.
- Much smaller than I expected. I'd guess this is more a product of first-year jitters than anything else. The show floor was smaller than the one in Rosemont for Wizard's show and there was still a good amount of open space. Even though there were more publishers, there were a lot less retailers than at past cons. Artist's Alley seemed about comparable. Attendance wasn't high either. Saturday was the busiest day as usual, but even then walking around wasn't too cumbersome. The thing is, I like all that just fine. The show had a pretty relaxed atmosphere, that while probably nothing like MoCCA or Heroes Con, still was pretty refreshing.
Beyond this, there is a multitude of small things I want to nitpick about. First, McCormick Place, where the show was, is in BFE. When I heard the location was going to be actually in Chicago instead of in Rosemont, I figured this meant downtown. Not exactly. McCormick Place basically was dropped on a huge piece of land right off the interstate. There is nothing around it. On Friday, we drove around for over an hour trying to find something to eat. Turns out there aren't any restaurants in the surrounding area, or at least we couldn't find any, with a GPS. On Sunday, we just decided to eat in Rosemont, where we staying, before heading to the con to avoid previous headaches. Secondly, the show was organized somewhat poorly. Part of this is that it was the first year, and both the attendees and the staff have to get used to everything, but beyond that some odd choices were made. We were often directed into rooms we could have easily avoided, and lines into the show were micromanaged to the point of futility. McCormick Place itself is confusing. Hopefully most of this will be better for both sides in the coming years as everyone settles in. Lastly, some of the staff were overly adamant and aggressive, but that has been the case for six years straight. Still, it's not necessary to yell at people to move forward when the person in front of them has taken five steps. Just sayin'.
Here's most of my haul.
It was another light year for me, as school and a pending trip to Germany in the summer are getting most of my money. Still, I'm happy with what I got. I found Boy's Club #2 and 3 along with Ganges #3 at the Chicago Comics booth. Always happy to support them after I visited their excellent store last year. I talked with Guy Davis for a bit in Artist's Alley and bought his sketchbook. I'm usually not a fan of con sketchbooks, as them seem hastily put together and I rarely give them a second look, but Davis's is nice. It's bound, bigger, and has a wide variety of art, along with quite a bit of interior writing and commentary, something missing from almost every other sketchbook I've looked at. Also ran into Matt Kindt for the third year in a row at the Top Shelf booth, where I got his new Super-Spy collection. I loved Super-Spy and bought this on the spot. Kindt unknowingly gave even more firepower to my obsession with eye patches by sketching one of the characters with one on the inside cover. I also bought almost all the Hellboy and BPRD trades I was missing, but didn't feel like including them, and I really don't know why. They're awesome though, trust me.
Prints and sketches have taken a hit in the past few years, as even the smaller artists I care about have been getting more popular and started charging more for their talents. Good for them I say. Guy Davis did the quick Lobster Johnson for me when I bought his sketchbook. The Seaguy was done by Cameron Stewart, who I didn't even know was going to be at the show until he was invited up on stage during a panel previewing a documentary on Grant Morrison. While I was at his table, a guy came up and asked if he could pencil a drawing of Batman on his leg that would be used as an outline for a tattoo. Stewart was reluctant, especially to draw it straight onto the guy. However, thanks to the internet I found the ending to this story. He drew it out on paper and gave it to the guy, who then did get the tattoo, which you can see here (went for the arm instead).
Special mention has got to go to these bad boys, courtesy of Cliff Chiang. I had seen these on his website and forgotten about them, but at $20 for both, how could I not buy them?
The thing that I'm most disappointed to not have in any of the pictures is a copy of Dash Shaw's new book Bodyworld. Originally serialized and still available as a webcomic on his website, it's this crazy soap-opera/sci-fi story that was unlike anything I'd ever read. The pictures of the book I've seen are gorgeous and it was the thing I was most looking forward to buying, not to mention actually meeting Shaw, whose other book, The Unclothed Man in the 35th Century AD, had some excellent stories from his MOME and animation work as well. Sadly, Shaw didn't really have a presence at the show. He was on a panel with Chip Kidd and Chris Ware that I attended, but after that I searched for the Pantheon booth and couldn't find it. I was dismayed that they weren't in the show program even though they had been listed on the website. Randomly enough on Saturday, while setting on the floor in the cafeteria, I saw Shaw walking through the room. Funnily, my foot was asleep, so I couldn't catch up to him before he went outside. I didn't feel like walking outside and interrupting his phone conversation, so I stalker-esque waited for him. I ended up letting him back inside as the doors in that area lock from the inside (I didn't get it either) and talking to him from there. I hope he didn't think I was some nutball, but he was the person I was most looking forward to seeing. He went on to inform me that there had been a mixup and Pantheon had no exhibitor space or any of their product at the show, so he was basically screwed. We ended up setting in the cafeteria and talking about all kinds of random comics stuff for about a half hour. He signed my copy of Unclothed Man and drew some nice pen sketches on the inside. While I felt bad he didn't have any presence at the show, I likely wouldn't have gotten to talk to him on such an intimate level if he had. It's easily the coolest thing that's ever happened to me at a con, getting to talk to a guy who really is one of the most interesting and visionary new cartoonists in comics.
Overall, C2E2 was a grand ol' time. The show was leagues better than any of the Wizard shows and has the potential to get even better in the years to come. With some luck I'll be there to experience some of them.
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Fight Night Picks
Nate Quarry vs Jorge Rivera - Two guys nearing the end of the career that have put together winning streaks, but I see Quarry as the favorite. I think his wrestling will be too much for Rivera and he should control the fight handily. Guessing a TKO by ground and pound.
Ross Pearson vs Dennis Siver - Here's a potential fight of the night. Pearson looked excellent in his proper UFC debut, putting on a striking clinic against Aaron Riley. Siver has won four in a row, two by highlight-reel spinning back kick knockout. Both these guys can go hard, but I'm feeling Pearson by TKO, but I could see this one going the distance and being close.
Roy Nelson vs Stefan Struve - Still gunning for that Burger King endorsement, Big Country tries to topple the Skyscraper. I should write for MMA websites. Anyway, I just don't see Struve being able to do anything against Nelson's weight advantage and substantial grappling ability. Nelson's striking has received attention after his knockout of Brendan Schaub, and Struve will have to use his reach to keep Nelson on the outside or he'll have that to worry about too. I would say Nelson will have to watch Struve's length on the ground, but I think Nelson is too sharp for that. Nelson by TKO.
Kenny Florian vs Takanori Gomi - Hmm, I'm still trying to figure out why the UFC signed Gomi. The guy is a legend, but he hasn't been relevant in what, three years? He was always so popular in Japan that the only way he would ever fight outside the country would have to be in some promotional swap (like Aoki is doing with Strikeforce) or if he had faded away. Does the UFC think Gomi has revitalized his career and can make a run at the lightweight belt and get a rematch with BJ Penn? (Incidentally, did you know Penn has not been taken down by a lightweight in six years? Cage Potato keeps bringing it up and it amazes me every time.) They must, because I think they're throwing him to the wolves by putting him in against Florian, arguably the second best lightweight in the world. I don't think Gomi's striking is as sharp as it used to be and I don't see any way Florian doesn't pick him apart on the feet. If Gomi tries to draw on his wrestling base he faces some serious jiu-jitsu. Florian by submission.
Ross Pearson vs Dennis Siver - Here's a potential fight of the night. Pearson looked excellent in his proper UFC debut, putting on a striking clinic against Aaron Riley. Siver has won four in a row, two by highlight-reel spinning back kick knockout. Both these guys can go hard, but I'm feeling Pearson by TKO, but I could see this one going the distance and being close.
Roy Nelson vs Stefan Struve - Still gunning for that Burger King endorsement, Big Country tries to topple the Skyscraper. I should write for MMA websites. Anyway, I just don't see Struve being able to do anything against Nelson's weight advantage and substantial grappling ability. Nelson's striking has received attention after his knockout of Brendan Schaub, and Struve will have to use his reach to keep Nelson on the outside or he'll have that to worry about too. I would say Nelson will have to watch Struve's length on the ground, but I think Nelson is too sharp for that. Nelson by TKO.
Kenny Florian vs Takanori Gomi - Hmm, I'm still trying to figure out why the UFC signed Gomi. The guy is a legend, but he hasn't been relevant in what, three years? He was always so popular in Japan that the only way he would ever fight outside the country would have to be in some promotional swap (like Aoki is doing with Strikeforce) or if he had faded away. Does the UFC think Gomi has revitalized his career and can make a run at the lightweight belt and get a rematch with BJ Penn? (Incidentally, did you know Penn has not been taken down by a lightweight in six years? Cage Potato keeps bringing it up and it amazes me every time.) They must, because I think they're throwing him to the wolves by putting him in against Florian, arguably the second best lightweight in the world. I don't think Gomi's striking is as sharp as it used to be and I don't see any way Florian doesn't pick him apart on the feet. If Gomi tries to draw on his wrestling base he faces some serious jiu-jitsu. Florian by submission.
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Mass Effect 2 Review
Mass Effect 2 is a superior game to its predecessor and Bioware should be given credit for fixing the majority of the serious issues with the original. More importantly, they made some key overhauls that not only better the game, but make it different from the first Mass Effect, so you are not playing the same game with different characters or story. Due to me being uncreative, here are some bullet lists.
THE GOOD
So there you go. I'm surprised I actually finished this. I probably left out half of the important things and am wrong about what I did talk about, but what are you going to do?
THE GOOD
- Primary shooter/secondary RPG. This is the biggest change between the two Mass Effects. The first was an RPG first and a shooter second. This relegated the combat to underdevelopment. It looked great in previews and test runs, but seemed around halfway there when released. Fortunately Bioware looked at this and took the steps to fix it. Mass Effect 2 now plays fully like the 3rd-person cover shooter made popular by Gears of War. The cover system has been improved from its near-unusable state in Mass Effect to the key component of combat. Unlike the first game, you cannot just run straight into enemies and mow them down. Careful management of cover is required to survive and the controls to use it work well. The way ammunition works is different too. Formerly, weapons had unlimited ammo but had an overheat gauge. This was a decent idea but fell apart when you realized ammo management was unnecessary. Now weapons do use ammo, but they all use a single type that enemies will drop. While this seems like the new false front, it makes sense because of the six possible class types for your character and their limitations on what weapons they can use. Specific ammo types would create the details that Mass Effect 2 sheds. Building on this, the micromanagement of equipment has been removed. You will only upgrade to different weapons in the same class (like getting a different assault rifle or shotgun from the one you currently have) a few times, and the new one is always better. Instead, weapons as a type can be upgraded for your whole squad and you can change up your armor but not the armor of your squad. I'll discuss why I think this might be a little too much later, but overall I feel like the emphasis on squad combat while still keeping the RPG elements that worked best (the dialogue wheel, exploration, and tech/biotic abilities) makes Mass Effect a well-balanced and stronger product.
- The AI of your companions seems improved in combat. I only have one trip through the game under my belt, but the improvement is so exceptional I am assuming it is constant. Your teammates will usually move to cover if they are being attacked and often move up and use different angles intelligently. This is opposed to Mass Effect, where the common strategy was to run into the middle of the area and take fire from every enemy until death. The friendly AI actually is friendly now, instead of a nuisance you have to manage so they cannot screw you over.
- The environmental design has expanded. The game areas are now varied graphically and the level design is different in every area. Mass Effect suffered from two or three standard level layouts and designs that were monotonous mere hours into the game.
- The graphics look excellent and avoid the old technical hiccups. This point is a good compliment to the new level sections. Really the graphics follow more from the original, which looked nice at the time. Faces in particular are vastly more detailed and well-animated. The framerate holds steady and most importantly the ridiculous texture pop-in from the first game is gone. To be fair, it is present in some instances, but it is hardly noticeable and resolves in a second or less, opposed to the beginning of conversations being marred by it in the original.
- The side quests have been fleshed out more. Specifically, each of your squad's "spotlight" missions have received a big upgrade and carry significant consequences depending on how they play out. Various interactive scenes replace the skeleton combat scenario with maybe a choice at the end. Particular highlights include an interrogation, working from within an assassination, and trying to tempt someone from out of hiding and trap them in a nightclub.
- It is plain cool to play a game where choices you made in a previous game directly affect everything. Relationship choices, life/death choices, and how you treated the world in general can show up. Fortunately this is somewhat restrained, as you are not given constant updates or appearances from every character or old quest you did, which would feel over-the-top and not befitting the huge universe.
- They took out the MAKO. If you've never played Mass Effect, count yourself lucky you missed this. The MAKO was a six-wheeled vehicle that you drove around in during several story missions and in general anytime you dropped from space onto a planet. It had some weapons and often you were tasked with killing enemies while in it. Unfortunately it was badly developed, out of place within the traditional framework, and frustrating as hell to control. Oh, and if you flipped it, your whole party died. It does not matter that this rarely happened, because it happened to everyone at least once, which is ridiculous. It might be hard to understand how annoying it was unless you played the game, but trust me: it being gone is a Martha Stewart-esque good thing.
- The story. I never thought Mass Effect's story was anything great, but it got the job done and Mass Effect 2 is the same. There are some serious curves thrown in throughout the opening, but they mostly fade away quickly without discussion. It also suffers from being the middle piece of a trilogy, as you cannot shake the feeling that everything you do is just setup for Mass Effect 3. Still, story has never been the chief goal of these games. Instead, prominence is given to extensive world-building with your ability to shape its outcome through your choices that exist in a now-perpetual world. While saying everything else is window dressing is an overstatement, it still is partially true.
- Voice-acting. Some of it is great and some not so much. The male voice for Shepard is still...off. Sometimes the lines come across as terribly overplayed and laugh-eliciting at the wrong moments. Some of that is due to the dialogue, which is overall solid but can still produce some real clunkers. Whoever voiced Zaeed and Mordin are the standouts. The former is basically Boba Fett with lines and the latter is an alien genius geneticist that speaks in rapid-fire minuscule sentences and fragments as he outlines seemingly everything running through his mind at every second.
- Resource gathering. Even though they canned the MAKO, this seems like its equally annoying replacement and not in the spirit of the new direction at all. In Mass Effect 2, you purchase upgrades for your ship, your squad, and your weapons by using quantities of four minerals. While you can find varying small amounts of them on missions, the main way to get them is by scanning planets and launching resource nodes. The problem is you need a considerable amount of all four to maximize your upgrades, and this takes hours of time. Basically, you go into a planet's orbit and start scanning by holding the left trigger and moving it around the surface. You have a gauge that will react whenever minerals are detected and then you can send out a probe that collects it. The whole process is time-consuming and boring as hell. Later you can acquire an upgrade that allows you to scan faster, but it is still a pain. It takes you out of the action and the story, but you have to do it to progress in the game. Certainly this is not something that should prevent you from playing the game, but it still grates, and seems like something that would have been in Mass Effect, with its much more varied options for equipment.
- Fuel. This sort of relates to resource gathering. Now, in certain parts of star systems, you must purchase fuel in able to move between points. What I fail to get is why only in certain parts and not everywhere. When you jump into new systems you do not need it, nor when you move around in interior clusters or nebula's. You only use it when you move between the clusters, nebula's, or other interior areas of systems. Fuel is thankfully not expensive and can be purchased in most systems at fuel depots, but I cannot understand why you only use it intermittently. In the big picture, this hardly detracts from the game, but it seems misplaced in the stripped down setup.
- Cinematic conversations. Now here is a good idea that went awry. The dialogue wheel was such a revelation in Mass Effect that Bioware could be forgiven for making the conversations always between two people that never moved and always stood a foot apart. So now they tried to step up their game and make everything the word I hate to use but which seems most appropriate: "cinematic." The characters will now move around during dialogue and sometimes interact with the environment. This works well for a little while, until you realize there are around four stock expressions and movements anyone will do. You can only watch Shepard crack his knuckles, clench his fist, and my personal favorite, cross his arms across his chest and assume the ultimate suspicious power stance, so many times before it gets irritating. Also stuck on repeat are instances in conversation where a character will get up and move around or examine something during a certain line and then will do the exact same movement with the same angle after they return to their previous position again and again. It gets unintentionally hilarious fast. Good try, and if Mass Effect 2 is any indication at fixing things that need to be, Bioware should get this under control next time.
- No customization is no fun. So earlier I said the less customization was an improvement, but on a smaller scale I think they might have taken too much out. While there was an overabundance of equipment in the first game, that mostly stemmed from the game giving you access to it too much, making ninety percent of it pointless. It was still interesting looking through the different manufacturers and mixing equipment with strengths for different characters that had vastly different abilities. That's totally gone in Mass Effect 2. The image of your characters never changes outside of few and far between weapon switches. The characters themselves have had their number of individual powers you can level reduced and the powers are more common among each member. It is certainly not bad enough that every character plays the same, but there has been a significant melding of the vastly different character classes from Mass Effect into two or three simple archetypes. This is certainly a subjective point, as the game is more streamlined for these changes, but I think it removes too much variety as a cost.
- The helmet glitch. Okay, here is something incredibly minor to finish up and affects nothing. The game does not recognize when your character is wearing a helmet. Since you keep your armor on constantly unless on your ship, this can create some hilarious moments. Watch in amazement as you take a drink straight through a visor and try not to fall out of your chair when your emotional embrace with your previous love leads her to assault your helmet with her tongue.
So there you go. I'm surprised I actually finished this. I probably left out half of the important things and am wrong about what I did talk about, but what are you going to do?
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Liquidity Trap
I beat Mass Effect 2. Review forthcoming (fingers crossed).
HIS 403: We moved out of the immediate post-war years and into the '50s and '60s. Specific focus on the economic explosion that was supposed to appear and fade quickly but ended up sticking for years, in the West at least. We're going to discuss the importation of foreign workers to fill labor shortages next week, which has much to do with current Europe and its identity crisis problem. The powers also start to lose much of their imperial territory, with decolonization rapidly starting. Looked at the new youth culture and its universal impact not just in Europe but in many parts of the world, coming mostly from the dreaded scourge of America. Relating to that, the "Americanization" of Europe was discussed. On the Eastern side, we focused on how things changed in the Eastern block after Stalin's death. Particular focus on the 1953 uprising in East Germany, the 1956 one in Hungary, and the Prague of Spring of 1968. These were all stopped by direct Soviet intervention. Khrushchev may have wanted to GTFA from Stalin, but he could still get clamp down with the best of them. And in '68 under Brezhnev...well Czechoslovakia probably got off easy, since 'ol Leonid was Uncle Joe Jr. Oh yeah, and Walter Ulbricht, leader of the SED and basically the authoritarian ruler of East Germany, got Nikki's permission to build a big wall in 1961.
And in other HIS 403 news, I've started seriously working on my research paper, focusing broadly on Chechnya. I'm still working out my thesis statement, but I've been lucky to find some good books and especially an excellent journal article that looks at the Chechen Wars from a military/operational standpoint. I want to talk about counterinsurgency some in the paper, so this was a great find. Reading the information and seeing the horrors committed by both sides, you have to feel for the civilians caught in the middle. Just some tidbits: Kidnapping makes up the largest portion of Chechen GDP. The corruption in the Russian military is so high that the number one source of arms and supplies to the Chechen guerrillas is the Russian military. The author of one of the books I'm using, Anna Politkovskaya, was assassinated two years after its publication, as were several of her comrades that worked for or contributed to the activist newspaper she was associated with. Everyone alleged to be connected to the killing was acquitted. And last but not least, the Chechens infamously held an entire theater in Moscow hostage over the occupation in 2002. The Russian government's response? They gassed the building, killing all the terrorists and 130 of their own civilians...
In MMA land, we found out that James Toney will not get to KO Kimbo for his first fight, at least probably not soon. Slice is still set to fight Matt Mitrione, while Toney does not yet have an opponent. Not much of significance from Sengoku 12. Akihiro Gono picked up a decision win over a weak opponent. Maximo Blanco delivered a brutal head-kick knockout. And Jorge Santiago won his rematch against Mamed Khalidov. While not MMA, Manny Pacquiao returns to the boxing ring today against Joshua Clottey. It's not the Mayweather super-fight, but Pac-Man has already achieved legendary status and is must-watch.
HIS 403: We moved out of the immediate post-war years and into the '50s and '60s. Specific focus on the economic explosion that was supposed to appear and fade quickly but ended up sticking for years, in the West at least. We're going to discuss the importation of foreign workers to fill labor shortages next week, which has much to do with current Europe and its identity crisis problem. The powers also start to lose much of their imperial territory, with decolonization rapidly starting. Looked at the new youth culture and its universal impact not just in Europe but in many parts of the world, coming mostly from the dreaded scourge of America. Relating to that, the "Americanization" of Europe was discussed. On the Eastern side, we focused on how things changed in the Eastern block after Stalin's death. Particular focus on the 1953 uprising in East Germany, the 1956 one in Hungary, and the Prague of Spring of 1968. These were all stopped by direct Soviet intervention. Khrushchev may have wanted to GTFA from Stalin, but he could still get clamp down with the best of them. And in '68 under Brezhnev...well Czechoslovakia probably got off easy, since 'ol Leonid was Uncle Joe Jr. Oh yeah, and Walter Ulbricht, leader of the SED and basically the authoritarian ruler of East Germany, got Nikki's permission to build a big wall in 1961.
And in other HIS 403 news, I've started seriously working on my research paper, focusing broadly on Chechnya. I'm still working out my thesis statement, but I've been lucky to find some good books and especially an excellent journal article that looks at the Chechen Wars from a military/operational standpoint. I want to talk about counterinsurgency some in the paper, so this was a great find. Reading the information and seeing the horrors committed by both sides, you have to feel for the civilians caught in the middle. Just some tidbits: Kidnapping makes up the largest portion of Chechen GDP. The corruption in the Russian military is so high that the number one source of arms and supplies to the Chechen guerrillas is the Russian military. The author of one of the books I'm using, Anna Politkovskaya, was assassinated two years after its publication, as were several of her comrades that worked for or contributed to the activist newspaper she was associated with. Everyone alleged to be connected to the killing was acquitted. And last but not least, the Chechens infamously held an entire theater in Moscow hostage over the occupation in 2002. The Russian government's response? They gassed the building, killing all the terrorists and 130 of their own civilians...
In MMA land, we found out that James Toney will not get to KO Kimbo for his first fight, at least probably not soon. Slice is still set to fight Matt Mitrione, while Toney does not yet have an opponent. Not much of significance from Sengoku 12. Akihiro Gono picked up a decision win over a weak opponent. Maximo Blanco delivered a brutal head-kick knockout. And Jorge Santiago won his rematch against Mamed Khalidov. While not MMA, Manny Pacquiao returns to the boxing ring today against Joshua Clottey. It's not the Mayweather super-fight, but Pac-Man has already achieved legendary status and is must-watch.
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Not Some Kind of Sage
The stars have exploded and I have more material.
At the end of Mass Effect 2, so maybe I can crank that review out next week.
Bought a significant amount of comics for the first time in several years. Hey, how often do you find a booth with everything 50% off AND a good selection? Rarely, and the last place I expected was in the swamp of Metropolis, Illinois. I got every Hellboy trade I didn't have except for one and a BPRD trade. Mondo Mignola.
The only thing I watched this week was Ichi the Killer. Well, I thought for a majority of the film that it was satire and absolutely brilliant, but then towards the end that wavered. There's some duality going on that reshaped what I was thinking. Enjoyable nevertheless. For sure: no one can do pain mixed with...sexual grime or something, quite like Asians.
In HIS 403 we looked at the aftermath of World War II.. Plenty of stuff in there about the Cold War not being a certainty until around 1948 and how Stalin and the other Allies went from a relative consensus to complete opposition. We also talked about De-Nazification and overall punishment towards collaborators, which was basically the Nuremberg Trials...and we're done, Hitler is still a BAMF. The political makeup mirrors the overall relations between the powers. Stalin is all about this Popular Front strategy...until the countries in the east are still so scared of Germany they're like, "Yes, please protect us Russia, communism is gold" and the countries in the west think Stalin sucks. Then it's Blockade time, but America shuts that down in a Berlin minute or a year, take your pick. Stalin wants time to recover, some cooperation, and a ton of territory everywhere. The West has some problems there and so it's time to party like it's 1949 in West Germany. Unlike consumer goods, Stalin wants his own Germany, so it's East Germany to the rescue soon enough. The people in the east get to watch the Social Democratic Party and German Communist party do the authoritarian fusion dance into the SED and we're set for approximately forty years of fun.
Upset central at WEC 47 this past Saturday. I thought people were underestimating Joseph Benavidez, especially with Torres coming off a brutal loss, but even I would've picked the mulleted Mexicano. Torres seemed docile on the feet and while he didn't take much damage on the mat he still got dominated. Jens Pulver may have had a badass walkout shirt, but that couldn't save him from the submission firestorm of Javier Vazquez. Pulver is a legend no matter how many fights he keeps losing but time passed him by long ago. It would've been great to see him get a win and just disappear, but that seems ever more unlikely. In the main event, Brian Bowles never really got anything going against Dominick Cruz, who has some of the most unorthodox striking I've seen. Bowles broke his hand with the first punch he threw, which certainly affected him. I'm assuming Benavidez will get the next shot at Cruz and the 135 belt, in what from here looks like a very interesting matchup between two young guys now at the top of the division.
At the end of Mass Effect 2, so maybe I can crank that review out next week.
Bought a significant amount of comics for the first time in several years. Hey, how often do you find a booth with everything 50% off AND a good selection? Rarely, and the last place I expected was in the swamp of Metropolis, Illinois. I got every Hellboy trade I didn't have except for one and a BPRD trade. Mondo Mignola.
The only thing I watched this week was Ichi the Killer. Well, I thought for a majority of the film that it was satire and absolutely brilliant, but then towards the end that wavered. There's some duality going on that reshaped what I was thinking. Enjoyable nevertheless. For sure: no one can do pain mixed with...sexual grime or something, quite like Asians.
In HIS 403 we looked at the aftermath of World War II.. Plenty of stuff in there about the Cold War not being a certainty until around 1948 and how Stalin and the other Allies went from a relative consensus to complete opposition. We also talked about De-Nazification and overall punishment towards collaborators, which was basically the Nuremberg Trials...and we're done, Hitler is still a BAMF. The political makeup mirrors the overall relations between the powers. Stalin is all about this Popular Front strategy...until the countries in the east are still so scared of Germany they're like, "Yes, please protect us Russia, communism is gold" and the countries in the west think Stalin sucks. Then it's Blockade time, but America shuts that down in a Berlin minute or a year, take your pick. Stalin wants time to recover, some cooperation, and a ton of territory everywhere. The West has some problems there and so it's time to party like it's 1949 in West Germany. Unlike consumer goods, Stalin wants his own Germany, so it's East Germany to the rescue soon enough. The people in the east get to watch the Social Democratic Party and German Communist party do the authoritarian fusion dance into the SED and we're set for approximately forty years of fun.
Upset central at WEC 47 this past Saturday. I thought people were underestimating Joseph Benavidez, especially with Torres coming off a brutal loss, but even I would've picked the mulleted Mexicano. Torres seemed docile on the feet and while he didn't take much damage on the mat he still got dominated. Jens Pulver may have had a badass walkout shirt, but that couldn't save him from the submission firestorm of Javier Vazquez. Pulver is a legend no matter how many fights he keeps losing but time passed him by long ago. It would've been great to see him get a win and just disappear, but that seems ever more unlikely. In the main event, Brian Bowles never really got anything going against Dominick Cruz, who has some of the most unorthodox striking I've seen. Bowles broke his hand with the first punch he threw, which certainly affected him. I'm assuming Benavidez will get the next shot at Cruz and the 135 belt, in what from here looks like a very interesting matchup between two young guys now at the top of the division.
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